Sikhs fall victim to rising Hindu nationalism in Australia

shafali

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)

Ripples from the farmers protests in India have reached Australian shores where Hindu nationalists are targeting Sikhs for being 'anti-national'.​

Amar Singh, President of Turbans 4 Australia, a Sikh charity organisation, says the Sikh community have never had “issues” with their Hindu compatriots in Australia. But when the Indian government, led by Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), began stigmatising protesting Indian farmers as part of Sikh separatist plot, relations between the two religious groups made a dramatic turn for the worse.

Last month Singh answered a call from an unlisted number on his cell phone - which would turn out to be a threat against his life.

“Modi is our god,” said the Indian accented caller. “If you don’t shut up, we will teach you a lesson. We will tie you up and burn you to death.”

Singh has since reported the call to the authorities, but says the entire Sikh community, totalling 80,000 members in Melbourne and Sydney, has been subjected to increased abuse and attacks from pro-Modi government supporters and Hindu nationalists in recent weeks. This includes online calls for boycotts against Sikh owned businesses and temples in retaliation for Sikh support of the ongoing farmers protests.

“For the first time in Australia we are witnessing tensions within Indian community groups, with one group attacking another because they demanded justice from the Indian government,” Deepak Joshi, an executive with The Humanism Project, a secular Indian expatriate advisory group, told me.

“In the past year or so we have witnessed several instances of online hate and threats of violence against those who criticise the Modi Government and against Muslims in particular in Australia, but this hate has been particularly directed against the Sikhs and social media since the farmers movement began.”

Joshi says Hindu nationalist groups have also held Indian flag rallies in Sydney and Melbourne in support of the Modi government in recent weeks, which he describes a “dog-whistle” to cast non-participating Sikh and Muslim expatriates as “anti-national.”

Hindu nationalist animus towards religious minorities reached a dangerous new high on February 28 when a group of Sikh men were ambushed in their car by several unidentified compatriots, who were armed with baseball bats and hammers, in an outer suburb of Sydney, forcing the victims to flee for their lives.

“There have been the odd racist remarks exchanged between Hindus and Sikhs in the past, but nothing like this kind of violence,” says Singh. “This attack was so shocking not only because of the violence but also because the victims were targeted, and the attack was pre-planned.”

While local authorities are yet to formally identify the perpetrators, the victims said they had recognised the men from a BJP-RSS car rally, where Hindu nationalists set fire to a Sikh religious flag.

The incident has prompted a public response from an elected lawmaker, marking the first time in Australian political history that Hindu nationalist or Hindutva ideology has been introduced to the public in a parliamentary setting.

New South Wales Member of Parliament David Shoebridge told his colleagues he has “not seen a single report of a violent act coming from any part of the political spectrum from the Indian community other than the extremist, right-wing Hindu nationalist part of the community.”

“There have already been too many incidents of far-right [Hindu] extremist violence, particularly against the Sikh community in western Sydney,” warned Shoebridge.

The MP also identified a Hindutva organisation by name in asking his colleagues how it came to be that Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) “find themselves in New South Wales public schools,” given the right-wing Hindu organisation is considered a military extremist religious organisation by the CIA.

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shafali

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
As Imran Khan has said, unless the Hindu extremism is tackled, the whole world will face the consequences. This is exactly what's happening.
 

disgusted

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
The Sikhs were undecided in pre-partition time which side to join. A born Hindu who converted to Sikhism Master Tara Singh became one the influetial leaders of Sikh community advocated joining India. On the steps of Punjab Assembly he started shouting "Pakistan Murdabad'. This was the keg that ignited communal violence in Punjab in which innumerable people perished. Probably this fire will take decades if not centuries to extinguish. It shows how a few thoughtless words are enough to ignite fires that will burn for ages.
 

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